A cost analysis of inherited colorectal cancer care in Varese Province

2016 
Abstract Aim Little scientific evidence is available on the costs of targeted genetic testing and surveillance programmes for the identification of hereditary colorectal cancers (HCRC). The present study is a cost analysis of an intensive surveillance programme with and without the use of genetic testing, carried out in a province of northern Italy. Additionally, cancer care using an intensive surveillance programme for gene carrier subjects was compared to cancer care in subjects not selected for genetic testing who followed unselective clinical surveillance. Methods A model based on epidemiological factors was developed to estimate the incidence of gene carriers for Lynch Syndrome. A hypothetical cohort of 98 healthy people with a high cancer risk (due to being carriers of a pathogenetic MMR mutation) was followed over a period of ten years. To evaluate the economic burden of using genetic testing, a cost analysis was performed. Results Despite genetic testing causing an initial increase in costs, their use within an intensive surveillance programme generated a saving of 24%, thanks to a better selection of individuals at high risk of colorectal cancers (CRC). This resulted in reduced resource consumption and in an overall saving of 36%, when considering the treatment of patients developing a genetic cancer, as compared to an unselective clinical surveillance. Conclusions Identification of HCRC led to surveillance that is more effective and could prevent premature death of patients affected by the most common hereditary forms of CRC. This, in the long-term, could result in an overall reduction of cancer care costs.
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